I find it more problematic that they have support micro 4:3 lenses and no support for PL mount. The lack of support for electronic lenses is really not that big a deal. The target users for these cameras don't expect or want auto aperture or autofocus. Admittedly this is a little annoying for Canon EF lenses, but anyone that gets this and is going to use non-cine lenses will probably just pick up a bunch of older full manual Nikon primes.

>And I mentions conservation. These plants supplied one millions homes in a state of 38 million. That is 2% reduction in capacity. The big thing we need to realize is >that energy is neither free nor infinate. We can go and buy a 60" TV that us going to use almost 400KWh in a year, or one that uses under 200. We can browse on >our 120 watt computer, or on our 5W tablet. We can turn on the lights in the middle of the day, or not. How much would we need to do to save 2% of the electricity? >Who much would be need to do to save 10%?

I believe you have accidentally conflated two different statistics here, the plant generates enough power for about 1 million average California homes, and the entire population of California is roughly 38 million poeple, not homes. Looking here: http://www.eia.gov/nuclear/state/California/ it appears that California's two nuclear plants produce roughly 16% of the base production, split basically evenly between the plants. Not 100% sure about this because the summer capacity column is somewhat confusing. I'm inferring that the nukes run pretty much full steam and they make up with largely natural gas.

I was at GDC last week and while I was in the ( eternally disgusting ) bathroom washing my hands a Googler wearing Google Glass walked in to use the urinal. The urge to say 'Ok glass, take a picture' was hard to resist.

When you are talking about switching between "like" platforms, for example Windows Standalone -vs- OSX Standalone -vs- Soon-to-be-Linux standalone the changes can be very minimal or almost nothing. My experience with the Windows/OSX standalone builds is that you can sometimes deploy with zero changes. The most common issues that seem to crop up are related to custom shaders.

I maintain a bunch of games and demos that we use as examples for our networking middleware, and they basically never need platform customizations for Windows/OSX. The Linux client isn't available yet but I would assume that it would be quite similar.

"Total nonsense. Almost every game these days is written in C++ and while they all vary in the amount of applied OOP and generic meta programming"

I think this is a rather dubious assertion unless you further qualify this by saying "console games" or possibly 'box retail games". Even with that caveat, it might be hard to argue, since the majority of the code for these games might be in a high level language backed by a core that might be c/c++.

I would also argue that the component/data driven design of many games and game engines primary goal is flexibility and extensibility, with a huge side benefit being the possible memory and performance benefits. I concede that my opinion there is highly subjective:)

I would just point out for the record that Kansas City, KS and Kansas City, MO are not rural. While it is true that rural Kansas schools are facing serious problems as a result of depopulation, nobody is lining up to send their children to school in KCK or KCMO.

I'm not entirely sure this deserves a response, but you might want to double check your assumptions about the demographics of Kansas City, KS. I admit this is an assumption on my part, but you might be surprised to know that Kansas City is largely in Missouri. KCK is by comparison very small, but I admit for this topic either might technically be correct since Google has deemed it fit to fiber them both up.

The AVM program has little or nothing to do with drones or robotics, I believe this is just some creative reporting done by the author. The "Manufacturing Experimentation and Outreach" part of the program is really just about getting manufacturing technology ( rapid prototyping hardware, cad software, etc ) into the hands of kids and getting them interested and excited about science, math, and engineering.

My understanding of the 'wanting unlimited rights" is that all the designs will be 'open source' and available to everyone. If you look at the Vehicleforge portion of the AVM proposal, I think you would see that what they are proposing is very similar to a traditional 'software forge" (sourceforge, github) but applied to design of physical systems.

I was really excited about this when I saw it earlier this week. In fact I thought it was so cool I attempted to buy one. The company appears to be selling them on Amazon, but won't ship them to the USA.... so, has anyone actually purchased one?

I believe the required disc for PS3 and now Wii is meant to get around the exclusive Xbox360 / Netflix streaming deal that exists currently. My understanding is that when the exclusive deal is over, the Netflix Player could move over to a normal installable program.

tuition prices are so high because kids keep getting approved for loans.

No, they're high because so many kids are trying to get into schools. Supply and demand.

Student loans are enabling/helping it, but it isn't the root cause.

Many undergrad classes are actually wildly profitable for traditional universities. It is apparently acceptable that many of the basic prerequisite courses are huge cattle calls with tons of students, and the universities still charge the same price per credit hour as much smaller and relatively more expensive classes.

The demand for students is actually heating up as many decide they would rather take these crappy classes online or at community colleges:)